San Michele Oratory Explained

The San Michele Oratory or Oratory of San Michele (Italian - Oratorio di San Michele) is an oratory chapel in Padova, Italy. The interior is painted with a cycle of frescoes on the life of the Virgin Mary by Jacopo da Verona.

History

Origins

It first arose near the Torlonga del Castello Carrarese, outside the ancient Roman walls of the city. It was built in 1397 over the ruins of the Santi Arcangeli church, which had been renamed San Michele by the Lombards, who proclaimed Michael the Archangel "patron of Italy" after their victory over the Byzantine Empire[1] The earlier church had been damaged in 1390 by a fire triggered by clashes between the Carraresi and Visconti during Francesco Novello da Carrara's siege of the city. After the city's fall, the Bovi family decided to build a chapel dedicated to the Virgin Mary, opening a gap in the north side of the old church's nave. An inscription on the interior wall beside the chapel entrance gives the date of construction as 1397, the commissioner of the building as Pietro di Bartolomeo de Bovi and the painter's name Jacopo da Verona:[2]

Restoration

Bibliography (in Italian)

External links

45.4013°N 11.8691°W

Notes and References

  1. C. Bellinati, Padova da salvare: l'antica Chiesa dei Santi Arcangeli (S.Michele) in Padova e la Cappella affrescata da Jacopo da Verona (1397), Padova, 1969.
  2. D. Banzato, M. Masenello, G. Valenzano (editors), Giotto e i cicli pittorici del Trecento a Padova, Milano, 2015, p. 113.